crazyfingers
Supermagnon
I see one left of a fork in a branch that's the left fork of a larger branch. Orange neck looking right.
I don't see the second.
I don't see the second.
The second has its back to the camera, above and to the left of its mate. It's standing on a leaf-less horizontal branch, doing an excellent leaf impersonation.I see one left of a fork in a branch that's the left fork of a larger branch. Orange neck looking right.
I don't see the second.
doing an excellent leaf impersonation.
I guess my color vision isn't up to it, I still can't see any birds. Shades of green are very hard for me.The second has its back to the camera, above and to the left of its mate. It's standing on a leaf-less horizontal branch, doing an excellent leaf impersonation.I see one left of a fork in a branch that's the left fork of a larger branch. Orange neck looking right.
I don't see the second.
Neither was moving when I noticed them; They must have seen me and frozen (I was only about two metres away from them)doing an excellent leaf impersonation.
Found it. Yes. Likely easier to spot when it's moving.
Yeah, I've had birds freeze when I was close and flight wasn't an option.Neither was moving when I noticed them; They must have seen me and frozen (I was only about two metres away from them)doing an excellent leaf impersonation.
Found it. Yes. Likely easier to spot when it's moving.
I don't know: that green collar seems natural to me! Kidding. Cool picsVirgin Canyon, Death Valley, California. I spooked herd of these guys up the canyon wall.
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But once I was standing still they grew less skittish and started coming back down to the canyon floor. (I presume this guy is wearing a tracking collar of some kind.)
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And back on the canyon floor:
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The ones that came back down while I was taking the pictures spooked a bit when I headed on. I stayed as far away from them as I could which did seem to make them less worried but I was constrained by the terrain.
All of these shots are with a 600mm effective lens. There were a few more that weren't too cooperative with the camera and the only decent positioning I got is messed up by motion blur. (This whole scene is in the shade, I was about 3 stops short for proper handholding but the image stabilizer saved most of them.)
Obviously they can read a calendar and see the holidays are over.It's normal for there to be 2-4 turkeys going through the yard any day. But 25 is unusual.
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On coyotes, I love hearing them sing. We have several families (packs?) so sometimes we hear one bunch from the south hill and it is answered by another bunch from the north. There’s a predation balance between coyotes culling some of the deer herd and the farmers who will shoot the coyotes because they go after the calves.
One of them scared the breath out of me a few years back. I saw her wandering up my side yard, sort of wandering between the mown area and the tall grass. (Yard = 3 acres of mown grass surrounded by the 80 acres of tall grass of the bird habitat) Not unsteady or frantic, just meandering. I called the Department of Environmental Conservation, and they concluded that her actions did not appear rabid. So I didn’t worry. Too much.
Anyway, a couple of days later I look out the back door, and there she is, just sitting under the apple tree…. STARING AT MY CHILDREN WHO WERE READING ON A BLANKET. So I go to the back door and tell them, “do not ask questions, do not collect your things, do not look around. Just stand up immediately and walk at a normal pace toward me, right now.” They are wise kids, so they did as they were told and saved their questions for inside. Ms. Coyote just looked at me and said, “I was just looking,” and blinked, slowly. She was beautiful, but I was glad not to see her in the yard again. Go eat the woodchucks, the turkeys and the deer, pls.